Systems concepts are applied to solve the problem of how early life could have emerged from an initially abiotic organic environment. Proteinoid or lipid microspheres are proposed to have polymerized from a primordial organic soup and to contain various amino acids and several different nucleobases. A self-replicating “basic set” hypercycle consisting of 10 XNA gene strands and 10 enzymes is proposed that utilizes inorganic phosphates as an energy source. The genes would utilize triplet combinations of adenosine and uracil to code for a replicase enzyme, a polymerase enzyme, and eight code translator (synthetase) enzymes. It is shown that there is a high probability that the basic set genes would emerge. Fissioning of the basic set microspheres into a population of microspheres all containing the basic set, could eliminate the problem of a single gene monopolizing use of the replicator enzyme at the expense of the others and greatly enhance the survivability of the replicating population as a whole. A thermodynamic analysis of such a self-replicating system is also presented. It is shown that genetic mutations will in the long-run allow the basic set to evolve to increased diversity, higher rates of enzyme synthesis, and greater rates of entropy production. Long-term evolution could have resulted in organisms similar to contemporary bacteria that utilize RNA genes with a four nucleobase codon system.

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Dr. LaViolette will be speaking at the Water Revolution Conference in Sedona, AZ which to be held from January 26th to 28th. You can learn more about the conference and register here: https://naturalactiontechnologies.com/water-revolution-conference/. Below is a summary of his lecture.

In August of 1998 Paul LaViolette was hired by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) to work as an examiner of MRI patents. Some months later, Tom Valone, a friend of his who also worked at the patent office began planning a conference on new energy technology that was to be held in Washington at the Department of Commerce auditorium. He created a posting on his website advertising the conference and LaViolette put a link to the posting on his own website.

In 2009 the German scientist Martin Grusenick conducted an interferometer experiment that proves the existence of an ether and that indicates the presence of an ether wind oriented vertical to the Earth's surface. He constructed an interferometer similar to that used by Michaelson-Morley and found